California governor-elect Gavin Newsom holds his son Dutch, 2, and talks with reporters after voting Tuesday, Nov. 6, 2018, in Larkspur, Calif. At left is his wife, Jennifer Siebel Newsom and at right his son Hunter, 7. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

A few hours before the polls closed on Tuesday, an organization that tracks California political trends reported that an eye-popping $1-plus billion had been spent on campaigns this year.

The tally by California Target Book implied that big things were happening. But the vote counts later that day indicated that in California, at least, it was a pretty much status quo election.

Those who had been expected to win, Democrats mostly, did win. But even though Democrats flipped at least two congressional seats – with the possibility of two or three others once all the votes are counted – the state did not play a significant role, as once seemed likely, in determining control of the House.

Democrats easily won enough seats in other states to retake the House and elevate San Francisco’s Nancy Pelosi into the speakership again.

The media frenzy over congressional contests overshadowed ho-hum contests for the two ballot-topping offices of governor and U.S. senator.

Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom coasted into the governorship, a pre-ordained outcome once he had fended off a primary challenge from fellow Democrat Antonio Villaraigosa and faced only token opposition from Republican businessman John Cox.

He will become, judging from his own words, the most liberal governor of the past half-century and perhaps ever, but now must figure out how to pay for his many promises of new health, education and social welfare benefits – or how to sidestep them.

Becoming governor of the nation’s richest and most populous state also elevates Newsom into the upper ranks of national politics, and automatically makes his future career grist for the pundit mill.

Could – and would – he run for president two years hence, given that two other Californians, Sen. Kamala Harris and Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, are already putative candidates?

If he opts out of 2020 and Trump wins a second term, the presidency would be open in 2024, neatly coinciding with the mid-point of a Newsom second term as governor. But if Trump loses to a Democrat in 2020, it could thwart whatever presidential ambitions Newsom might harbor.

Dianne Feinstein, first elected to the Senate in 1992, won another six-year term, but she’s 85 years old and it wouldn’t be surprising if she stepped down before 2024, thus allowing Newsom to appoint her successor and perhaps even take the seat himself as a better pathway to the presidency.

Feinstein’s challenger, fellow Democrat Kevin de León, hoped that anti-Donald Trump fervor and the Democrats’ shift to the left would make Feinstein vulnerable, but his campaign never shifted out of first gear.

De León, former president pro tem of the state Senate, could have claimed a down-ballot statewide office and moved up the ladder, but he grabbed for the brass ring and missed it. Now he’ll be hunting for a backup position, perhaps on the Los Angeles City Council.

The most spectacular campaign spending in California this year was on 11 statewide ballot measures. They accounted for a third of the $1 billion with nearly $200 million of that spent against two measures, Proposition 6, which would have repealed a package of gas taxes and car fees passed by the Legislature, and Proposition 8, which purported to cut costs of dialysis treatments for those with kidney failure.

While both measures lost, the $366 million spent on ballot measures this year made winners of campaign consultants and indicated that Californians can look forward, perhaps with dread, at deciding many more high-dollar issues at future elections.

CALmatters is a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California’s state Capitol works and why it matters. For more stories by Dan Walters, go to calmatters.org/commentary